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Patterson's defense wasn't what was winning them games in the Big XII, it was their offense which you mentioned was primarily the Air Raid, an offense that almost everyone in college football (or its concepts) runs today. As for Kansas State, the option heavy shotgun spread is not an innovative scheme in todays game. Chip Kelly with Oregon, Urban Meyer at Florida, Rich Rodgriguez at Michigan, Gus Malzahn at Auburn, and others were doing it at big name schools before Kansas State started implementing it with Colin Klein (their most successful period in the last 20 years). Chris Peterson was great a trick plays, I will give you that, but trick plays account for how much of an offense? Most of things he did on the offensive side were similar to the old pro style offenses that many teams in college football used during the early 2000s. At the end of the day it's about finding a good coach. Are there good coaches that innovate, yes many do. But to say that the only way to be successful at a non Bama like school is to be innovative is false.
- If you look back at 2010 or so, there were three big unconventional coaches in the NCAA: Mike Leach with the Air Raid on offense, Paul Johnson with the run-heavy flexbone on offense, and Gary Patterson on defense. Many of us often wished to see a Patterson defense combined with a Leach or Johnson offense to see how far you would go with scheme. I’m sure Patterson would be shocked to hear that his defense wasn’t winning games.
- Patterson had the #1 ranked defense 5 times during his tenure at TCU: https://247sports.com/college/tcu/A...s-Gary-Patterson-coaching-timeline-174319500/
- Here’s more info on Patterson’s innovations in defensive scheme: https://www.footballstudyhall.com/2...e-gary-patterson-4-2-5-how-to-stop-the-spread
- Mississippi State and some other schools run Air Raid. Running run-and-shoot route trees doesn’t mean that you’re running Air Raid, and if it did then Paul Johnson was an Air Raid coach. If you ask Dabo Swinney or Nick Saban if they run Air Raid, they’ll say “no”.
- Urban Meyer’s offense was unconventional, but he didn’t want to be as unconventional as Paul Johnson and he said so. But he definitely crafted his offense for a scheme advantage.